Design and Implementation of Lambdas in Java 8

Alfred V. Aho
[email protected]
Lecture 2: Design and Implementation
of Lambda Expressions in Java 8
CS E6998-1: Advanced Topics in
Programming Languages and Compilers
September 15, 2014
Outline
1. What is the lambda calculus?
2. What is functional programming?
3. What are the benefits of functional
programming?
4. Functional programming in Java 8
5. Java 8 lambda expressions
6. Implementation of Java 8 lambda expressions
7. Streams
The Lambda Calculus
• The lambda calculus was introduced in the 1930s by
Alonzo Church as a mathematical system for defining
computable functions.
• The lambda calculus is equivalent in definitional
power to that of Turing machines.
• The lambda calculus serves as the computational
model underlying functional programming languages
such as Lisp, Haskell, and Ocaml.
• Features from the lambda calculus such as lambda
expressions have been incorporated into many
widely used programming languages like C++ and
now very recently Java 8.
What is the Lambda Calculus?
• The central concept in the lambda calculus is an
expression generated by the following grammar
which can denote a function definition, function
application, variable, or parenthesized expression:
expr → λ var . expr | expr expr | var | (expr)
• We can think of a lambda-calculus expression as a
program which when evaluated by beta-reductions
returns a result consisting of another lambdacalculus expression.
Example of a Lambda Expression
• The lambda expression
λ x . (+ x 1) 2
represents the application of a function λ x . (+ x 1)
with a formal parameter x and a body + x 1 to the
argument 2. Notice that the function definition
λ x . (+ x 1) has no name; it is an anonymous
function.
• In Java 8, we would represent this function definition
by the Java 8 lambda expression x -> x + 1.
More Examples of Java 8 Lambdas
• A Java 8 lambda is basically a method in Java without a declaration
usually written as (parameters) -> { body }. Examples,
1. (int x, int y) -> { return x + y; }
2. x -> x * x
3. ( ) -> x
• A lambda can have zero or more parameters separated by commas
and their type can be explicitly declared or inferred from the
context.
• Parenthesis are not needed around a single parameter.
• ( ) is used to denote zero parameters.
• The body can contain zero or more statements.
• Braces are not needed around a single-statement body.
What is Functional Programming?
• A style of programming that treats computation as
the evaluation of mathematical functions
• Eliminates side effects
• Treats data as being immutable
• Expressions have referential transparency
• Functions can take functions as arguments and
return functions as results
• Prefers recursion over explicit for-loops
Why do Functional Programming?
• Allows us to write easier-to-understand, more
declarative, more concise programs than
imperative programming
• Allows us to focus on the problem rather than
the code
• Facilitates parallelism
Java 8
• Java 8 is the biggest change to Java since the
inception of the language
• Lambdas are the most important new addition
• Java is playing catch-up: most major
programming languages already have support
for lambda expressions
• A big challenge was to introduce lambdas
without requiring recompilation of existing
binaries
Benefits of Lambdas in Java 8
•
•
•
•
Enabling functional programming
Writing leaner more compact code
Facilitating parallel programming
Developing more generic, flexible and
reusable APIs
• Being able to pass behaviors as well as data to
functions
Java 8 Lambdas
•
•
•
•
•
Syntax of Java 8 lambda expressions
Functional interfaces
Variable capture
Method references
Default methods
Example 1:
Print a list of integers with a lambda
List<Integer> intSeq = Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
intSeq.forEach(x -> System.out.println(x));
• x -> System.out.println(x) is a lambda expression that
defines an anonymous function with one parameter
named x of type Integer
Example 2:
A multiline lambda
List<Integer> intSeq = Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
intSeq.forEach(x -> {
x += 2;
System.out.println(x);
});
• Braces are needed to enclose a multiline body in a
lambda expression.
Example 3:
A lambda with a defined local variable
List<Integer> intSeq = Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
intSeq.forEach(x -> {
int y = x * 2;
System.out.println(y);
});
• Just as with ordinary functions, you can define local
variables inside the body of a lambda expression
Example 4:
A lambda with a declared parameter type
List<Integer> intSeq = Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
intSeq.forEach((Integer x -> {
x += 2;
System.out.println(x);
});
• You can, if you wish, specify the parameter type.
Implementation of Java 8 Lambdas
• The Java 8 compiler first converts a lambda expression
into a function
• It then calls the generated function
• For example, x -> System.out.println(x) could
be converted into a generated static function
public static void genName(Integer x) {
System.out.println(x);
}
• But what type should be generated for this function?
How should it be called? What class should it go in?
Functional Interfaces
• Design decision: Java 8 lambdas are assigned to functional
interfaces.
• A functional interface is a Java interface with exactly one
non-default method. E.g.,
public interface Consumer<T> {
void accept(T t);
}
• The package java.util.function defines many new
useful functional interfaces.
Assigning a Lambda to a Local Variable
public interface Consumer<T> {
void accept(T t);
}
void forEach(Consumer<Integer> action {
for (Integer i:items) {
action.accept(t);
}
}
List<Integer> intSeq = Arrrays.asList(1,2,3);
Consumer<Integer> cnsmr = x -> System.out.println(x);
intSeq.forEach(cnsmr);
Properties of the Generated Method
• The method generated from a Java 8 lambda
expression has the same signature as the
method in the functional interface
• The type is the same as that of the functional
interface to which the lambda expression is
assigned
• The lambda expression becomes the body of
the method in the interface
Variable Capture
• Lambdas can interact with variables defined
outside the body of the lambda
• Using these variables is called variable capture
Local Variable Capture Example
public class LVCExample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
List<Integer> intSeq = Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
int var = 10;
intSeq.forEach(x -> System.out.println(x + var));
}
}
• Note: local variables used inside the body of a lambda
must be final or effectively final
Static Variable Capture Example
public class SVCExample {
private static int var = 10;
public static void main(String[] args) {
List<Integer> intSeq = Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
intSeq.forEach(x -> System.out.println(x + var));
}
}
Method References
• Method references can be used to pass an
existing function in places where a lambda is
expected
• The signature of the referenced method needs
to match the signature of the functional
interface method
Summary of Method References
Method Reference
Type
Syntax
Example
static
ClassName::StaticMethodName
String::valueOf
constructor
ClassName::new
ArrayList::new
specific object
instance
objectReference::MethodName
x::toString
arbitrary object of a
given type
ClassName::InstanceMethodName Object::toString
Conciseness with Method References
We can rewrite the statement
intSeq.forEach(x -> System.out.println(x));
more concisely using a method reference
intSeq.forEach(System.out::println);
Default Methods
Java 8 uses lambda expressions and default
methods in conjunction with the Java collections
framework to achieve backward compatibility
with existing published interfaces
For a full discussion see Brian Goetz, Lambdas in
Java: A peek under the hood.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLksirK9nnE
Stream API
• The new java.util.stream package provides
utilities to support functional-style operations on
streams of values.
• A common way to obtain a stream is from a
collection:
Stream<T> stream = collection.stream();
• Streams can be sequential or parallel.
• Streams are useful for selecting values and
performing actions on the results.
Stream Operations
• An intermediate operation keeps a stream
open for further operations. Intermediate
operations are lazy.
• A terminal operation must be the final
operation on a stream. Once a terminal
operation is invoked, the stream is consumed
and is no longer usable.
Example Intermediate Operations
• filter excludes all elements that don’t
match a Predicate.
• map performs a one-to-one transformation of
elements using a Function.
A Stream Pipeline
A stream pipeline has three components:
1. A source such as a Collection, an array, a
generator function, or an IO channel;
2. Zero or more intermediate operations; and
3. A terminal operation
Stream Example
int sum = widgets.stream()
.filter(w -> w.getColor() == RED)
.mapToInt(w -> w.getWeight())
.sum();
Here, widgets is a Collection<Widget>. We create a stream of
Widget objects via Collection.stream(), filter it to produce a
stream containing only the red widgets, and then transform it into a
stream of int values representing the weight of each red widget.
Then this stream is summed to produce a total weight.
From Java Docs
Interface Stream<T>
Parting Example: Using lambdas and stream to
sum the squares of the elements on a list
List<Integer> list = Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
int sum = list.stream().map(x -> x*x).reduce((x,y) -> x + y).get();
System.out.println(sum);
• Here map(x -> x*x) squares each element and
then reduce((x,y) -> x + y) reduces all elements
into a single number
http://viralpatel.net/blogs/lambda-expressions-java-tutorial/
References
A lot of the material in this lecture is discussed in much more
detail in these informative references:
• The Java Tutorials,
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/index.html
• Lambda Expressions,
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/lambdaex
pressions.html
• Adib Saikali, Java 8 Lambda Expressions and Streams,
www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pDm_kH4YKY
• Brian Goetz, Lambdas in Java: A peek under the hood.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLksirK9nnE